Emmanuel Macron, Royal Wedding, Cannabis: Your Friday Briefing

Europe raises the ante with Trump, Britain’s royal wedding fever and Estonia’s high internet hopes. Here’s the latest:

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CreditVirginia Mayo/Associated Press

•“We will not negotiate with the sword of Damocles hanging over our heads.”

That was the European Commission president, Jean-Claude Juncker, above center, venting his anger at President Trump. European Union leaders announced they would seek to prohibit companies based in the bloc from complying with newly reimposed American sanctions on Iran.

And perhaps no European leader is more bruised than President Emmanuel Macron of France, whose fruitless embrace of Mr. Trump, replete with hand holding, hugs and dandruff dusting, has come back to haunt him domestically.

A British inquiry into the deadly fire at London’s Grenfell public housing complex recommended a radical overhaul of building rules, but did not call for banning all flammable facades, a critical factor in the inferno that killed 71 people last June.

Survivors of the fire and Labour members of Parliament condemned the report, and demanded a ban on the cladding used on Grenfell Tower, above. Still, the report amounts to a striking indictment of property developers and the officials who police them.

Meanwhile, it’s been exactly one year since Robert Mueller was appointed as the special counsel for the Russia inquiry. Mr. Trump noted the anniversary with a series of Twitter posts reminding his 52 million followers of his belief that the investigation is a witch hunt.

Kanep means cannabis in Estonian, and the leaf has been used as a symbol of the area for years, referring to the hemp traditionally grown there and made into cloth, oil and rope.

Local officials followed through on their promise and adopted the symbol, above, this week.

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Business

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CreditKarsten Moran for The New York Times

• The Kushner real estate company, controlled by the family of President Trump’s son-in-law and adviser, Jared Kushner, is close to getting a bailout of its financially troubled flagship property, above, in New York City, by a company tied to Qatar’s government.

• PayPalreached a deal to buy the iZettle, Europe’s answer to the mobile payments company Square, for about $2.2 billion. The deal will expand PayPal’s global reach and highlights the arms race in the world of payments.

• Fashion companies everywhere are at risk of boycott for political missteps, but the provocative Chanel and Fendi designer, Karl Lagerfeld, seems immune. Our chief fashion critic finds out what makes him so special.

In the News

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CreditEuropean Pressphoto Agency

• Libya’s denuclearization 15 years ago is playing a key role in North Korea’s hesitations over upcoming talks with the United States. The fate of Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi, above, who was toppled and killed in 2011, looms large for Pyongyang. [The New York Times]

• The E.U.’s top court ruled in favor of a near-total ban on three insecticides that studies have linked to declining bee populations. [BBC]

• Poland plans to expel one Russian and banned four others over allegations of trying to fuel animosity between Poles and Ukrainians. [Associated Press]

• “Thank the party!” Tens of thousands of Chinese Muslims are being held in internment camps where they are being forced to disavow their faith. [Associated Press]

• An Ebola outbreak in the Democratic Republic of Congo has spread to a major port city, raising alarm among health officials. [The New York Times]

Noteworthy

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• “A failure at every level.” A California man is awaiting execution for a quadruple murder, and officials refuse to allow DNA testing that will most likely exonerate him. Our Op-Ed columnist Nicholas Kristof examined the case.